Hey
The U.S. Marine Corps Force Reconnaissance Lyrics


Hey cowboy
What you doing here
Don't mind the company
But you keep spilling my beer
And he's like oh man I'm sorry
But the band up there
They're breaking my heart
The simplicity of the lyrics and the melody together
Oh man what a work of art
Come on sing it with me
You
You're on my mind
Yeah you
You're on my mind
Hey cowgirl
Well who'd you come here with
I'd like to buy you a fancy cocktail
A nice beverage
And she's like oh man I'm sorry
But I didn't come here to get hit on by some jerk
So I guess the only thing left for me to do now
Is just go back to work
But I'll be singing it all shift
You
You're on my mind
Yeah you
You're on my mind
Yeah you
You're on my mind
Yeah you
You're on my mind
And there's an afterimage of your face
Its like a flash of light that's burned in my brain
And baby anytime you go away
You
You're on my mind
Yeah you
You're on my mind
Yeah you
You're on my mind
Yeah you
You're on my mind


Lyrics © O/B/O DistroKid



Written by: Dani Zessoules, Emily Mann, Pat Gunning, Reed Doherty

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
To comment on or correct specific content, highlight it

Genre not found
Artist not found
Album not found
Song not found
Most interesting comment from YouTube:

@Ryan-jz6st

I was a contract Recon Marine (UZ) back in 07. I don't recall in SOI (ITB for me) being offered to go Recon. After ITB I remember going to MART (Marines Awaiting Recon Training) for about 2 months before BRC started. MART was in trailers on the hillside across from where the new Recon school is. Lots of pool sessions, some knot tying work, PT, etc. They did a good job getting us prepped for BRC; most of the guys that were there were either guys recycled from previous BRC classes for injuries or guys waiting to take BRC for the first time. The underwater 25m crossover was the biggest obstacle for me; I couldn't do more than 15m until an instructor told me that if I didn't do it he would jump in and tackle me and hold me down until I made it the full 25m. I successfully completed the 25m crossover after that ;)

BRC itself was divided into 3 phases, each about 1 month long: the initial schoolhouse/pool phase, the patrol phase, and the amphib phase in Coronado. Phase 1 was the biggest shock as the pool sessions were brutal, maybe 6-8 hours a day in the pool. I remember being in the classroom on day 2 after a thrashing in the pool and the instructors yelling at a guy for falling asleep in class; he wasn't sleepy, but his eyes were so inflamed from the pool chlorine that he could barely open them. Rucks were easy for me, but some guys really struggled. I think the longest were maybe 20K(?) but that was up and down some raunchy hills.

Phase 2 was just patrolling. Get comfortable sleeping under the ranger blanket and not sleeping much.

Phase 3 at coronado was probably the most exciting; lots of busting surfs in the CRCCs (rubber rafts) with and without outboard engines. Lots of 1-2 mile fins with and w/o packs. 3am fins in the pacific in december was not fun but its a great spot for libo; I remember being so tired going out with the boys on a friday that I fell asleep in the theatre watching the Dark Knight.

S/F



All comments from YouTube:

@johanoncalvin87

I volunteered for Recon at SOI after enlisting as an 0311. It was definitely hard, but worth it. I grew up in the ocean so swimming was a big advantage for me. Also, it's more important to be able to ruck than run a sub 18 min 3 mile.

Edit:

Literally after graduation the Recon instructors came over and they said grab your shit and follow me. Seabag, backpack, whatever you own, grab that shit and you are off on a several mile run. At the end of the run you have a fun PT session and the games began (MART marines awaiting recon training, BRC basic recon course).

The people who don't make it can't swim, can't ruck, can't ruck-run, can't stay awake for 36 hours.

@TSYONTZ

Solid comment! You had a huge advantage growing up swimming as you mentioned. (Wish more would realize this..) Also rucking is clutch over running. Thanks for bringing that up.

Also that edit comment is good! The instructors don’t F around and as soon as you get dropped off it’s go time. I appreciate the detail and insight for those who are interested. Hopefully the see it. If not, they’ll surely be surprised 😂

@nickp6221

I played water polo for 3 years. I can stay in water for a while, for example yesterday I saw 1.6Miles. Is this a good base for recon? My running needs work but I have till summer before boot camp.

@nickp6221

@@johanoncalvin87 For running my recent 3 mile was 23:30. I started running in august. What time do you recommend for BRC and any advice? Thanks

@nickp6221

@@johanoncalvin87 Also if you wash out will they put you back as your MOS if it’s an infantry MOS?

@johanoncalvin87

@@nickp6221 I would try to have 21 minutes or better. I ran in the 19s. Rucking saved my butt. I maxed out pull ups and situps and refused to quit on all of the events. Better athletes than me dropped out.

16 More Replies...

@TheMutHazel

Being confident underwater is important. My buddy said you have to tie knots, clear masks, swim 25m, and move bricks all while underwater.

@TSYONTZ

He’s not wrong. He also left out a bunch of other fun stuff…all under water 😂

@TheMutHazel

@@TSYONTZ can you give me some example? I'm interested.

@DanielCamposaweosme

@@TheMutHazel being thrown around under water the instructor can tackle you so you can lose air you swim the 25 meters underwater I believe breathing CO2 the oxygen tank so you can pretty much blackout under water

More Comments

More Versions